Tag torture

Holiday Weekend Reading

I’ll grant you that Fourth Of July weekend isn’t typically spent sitting around reading, but if your holiday weekend gets rained out or you’ve eaten your entire body weight in hot dogs and pie and need to sit quietly for a while, maybe you might like something to look at.

Published in 1947, “Goodnight Moon” took hold as an omnipresent part of American culture as the Cult of Overindulged Childhood arrived in the 1980s and today is something of an institution in and of itself. The author of the book, Margaret Wise Brown, was a prolific writer of children’s books at a time when they were not nearly as big a deal as they are now, but she willed the royalties from several of her books to the three children of close family friends just shortly before her own sudden death in 1952. As the reputation and sales of “Goodnight Moon” grew over the years, the royalties turned into a small fortune for the beneficiary of that title, a fellow named Albert Clarke. This 2000 Wall Street Journal profile of Clarke by journalist Joshua Prager is not the story you’d like it to be, given the setup, but is fascinating nonetheless. (via longform.org)

Speaking of growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, this Splitsider post about Calvin & Hobbes by AJ Aronstein is a nice consideration of the problem with nostalgia, seen through the lens of a 20-something who is becoming aware of his own past and sees the overindulgence in nostalgia via the Internet as troubling. Personally, I am very glad that my own decade of childhood nostalgia happened before the Internet came along, because it helped preserve some of the “lostness”; now, of course, every decade of pop culture is so oversaturated online that it’s trivial to reclaim it, but without the sentimentality that comes with that reconnection that happens to people in their 20s.

This isn’t a terribly long piece, but bears reading: AdBusters.org recently ran this harrowing excerpt of a first-hand account of torture in an Egyptian jail from an Australian Muslim who was arrested in Pakistan after 9/11 and turned over to the CIA as a terrorist. The U.S. handed him over to Egypt, which was obligingly handling “coercive interrogation” for us in the years before we became torturers ourselves. He was tortured for five months before being sent to Guantanamo for three years. His torturer was the man who is now the U.S.-approved ruler who replaced Hosni Mubarak after the “Arab Spring” revolution. Keep that in mind when you tell yourself about how wonderful the “democratic revolution” in Egypt was.

From the “Be Careful What You Wish For” Department comes this Salon article by author Tim Johnston, who found himself the subject of some public praise by David Sedaris, which turned his novel into the Book Tour From Hell.

This Dangerous Minds post about the Greek financial crisis is a good backgrounder if you hadn’t followed much of the story prior to the onset of rioting and the austerity measures imposed by the parliament this week. By contrast, it’s worth reading this much-longer piece from the March issue of Vanity Fair which explores the Irish financial crisis, which somehow did NOT turn into riots and mayhem.

This article from the British conservative magazine Prospect is a short look at how the central government in China is cleverly managing a resurgence in a Mao personality cult among younger people who did not live through the uphevals of Mao’s rule in order to generate domestic support for the party and international interest in “red tourism” just in time for the Chinese Communist Party’s 90th anniversary.

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And Speaking Of Big Dicks…

cheney1

Via Linkmeister, who got it from Making Light, who got it from Charlie Pierce, who was subbing for Eric Alterman, who blogs at The Nation:

I have now lived through three major episodes in my life where the political elite have told me quite plainly that neither I nor my fellow citizens are sufficiently mature to suffer the public prosecution of major crimes committed within my government. The first was when Gerry Ford told me I wasn’t strong enough to handle the sight of Richard Nixon in the dock. Dick Cheney looked at this episode and determined that the only thing Nixon did wrong was get caught. The second time was when the entire government went into spasm over the crimes of the Iran-Contra gang and I was told that I wasn’t strong enough to see Ronald Reagan impeached or his men packed off to Danbury. Dick Cheney looked at this and determined that the only thing Reagan and his men did wrong was get caught and, by then, Cheney had decided that even that wasn’t really so very wrong and everybody should shut up. Now, Barack Obama, who won election by telling the country and its people that they were great because of all they’d done for him, has told me that I am not strong enough to handle the prosecution of pale and vicious bureaucrats, many of them acting at the behest of Dick Cheney, who decided that the only thing he was doing wrong was nothing at all, who have broken the law, disgraced their oaths, and manifestly belong in a one-room suite at the Hague. Not to put too fine a point on it, but I’m sick and goddamn tired of being told that, as a citizen, I am too fragile to bear the horrible burden of watching public criminals pay for their crimes and that, as a political entity, my fellow citizens and I are delicate flowers encased in candy-glass who must be kept away from the sight of men in fine suits weeping as they are ripped from the arms of their families and sent off to penal institutions manifestly more kind than those in which they arranged to get their rocks off vicariously while driving other men mad.

Hey, Mr. President. Put these barbarians on trial and watch me. I’ll be the guy out in front of the courtroom with a lawn chair, some sandwiches, and a cooler of fine beer. I’ll be the guy who hires the brass band to serenade these criminal bastards on their way off to the big house. I’ll be the one who shows up at every one of their probation hearings with a copy of the Constitution, the way crime victims show up at the parole board when their attacker comes up for release. I’ll declare a national holiday—Victory Over Torture Day—and lead the parade right up whatever gated street it is that Cheney lives on these days. Trust me, Mr. President. I can take it.

Bravo, Charlie!

While Dead-Eye Dick was Vice President, you couldn’t get a word out of him because he was too busy plotting to destroy the Free World from his Undisclosed Location. Now, all of a sudden, he’s Joe Talk-Show and can’t get enough mic time to warn us all that we’re DOOOOOOOOMED! His latest trick is to dare the Obama Administration to release the evidence of all the times Torture Saved America. That should be a pretty short list…unlike the 183 times they waterboarded Khalid Sheikh Muhammed until he started making up information based on movies he had seen. You’d think a guy with his own personal death squad wouldn’t NEED to torture anybody to save America, but apparently that’s just how he rolls.

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Random Notes On Election Eve


A public service commercial from 1960


    Walter Cronkite and Univac tally the 1952 election results

  • An interesting and happy coincidence: not only is tomorrow Election Day, it’s Walter Cronkite’s 92nd birthday. Even though Cronkite continued to show up for Election Night coverage for many years after his 1981 retirement, he’s not expected to visit the CBS studios tomorrow night.

  • Typical McCain supporters

  • Søren, a Mutual Friend of Torrez, has done an absolutely bang-up job of documenting all the many and varied ways the McCain-Palin campaign has lied, smeared, baited, and otherwise spread hatred and engendered so much shame and ignominy upon themselves that neither should ever be permitted to run for public office again and that the people who have run their appalling and disgraceful campaign should be banned from doing so ever again. I also recommend Søren’s post where he talks about the three basic types of fear-mongering.

  • Don’t give up the ship!

  • Gore Vidal and others have penned an open letter to Barack Obama and the Democratic Party pleading with them not to concede the election if it is a close call for McCain until all ballot challenges have been thoroughly investigated and resolved. Both Al Gore and John Kerry conceded to George Bush well before the outcomes were finalized, giving the Bush campaigns the advantage in seeing those disputes resolved in their candidate’s favor, even though widespread fraud and tampering hampered accurate vote tallies. Since very little real election reform ever emerged from the outrage caused by these events, even such a symbolic gesture as a graceful concession takes on huge significance. (via The Seminal)

  • Day One: End Torture

  • The American Civil Liberties Union has offered this agenda for the restoration of those civil liberties which were abrogated or severely weakened by the Bush Administration. The agenda is not targeted at Barack Obama specifically, though it’s a safe assumption that it is written with a President-elect Obama in mind, since it seems highly unlikely that John McCain would reverse any of the assaults on liberty made by Bush. Their call for Day One of the next administration: close the prison at Guantanamo, discontinue the policy of extraordinary rendition of prisoners to countries that practice torture, and issue an executive order immediately ending torture and abusive interrogation by ANY U.S. government personnel. It is a shameful moment indeed when a newly-elected President must be urged to do these things, and even worse to realize that, whichever man is elected tomorrow, these recommendations might not be heeded.
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The REAL Axis Of Evil

Overheard by reporters: “You think that’s good, come back to my hotel when this is over and I’ll show you some REAL torture! We’ve been doing it for over a thousand years!”

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Al Quaeda’s New Recruiting Poster

Over the weekend, George Bush vetoed a bill that would have prohibited the CIA from using waterboarding and other forms of torture.

In this video (via boingboing), former FBI interrogator Jack Cloonan, who was featured in the Oscar-winning documentary “Taxi To The Dark Side”, says that, while torture is practically worthless as an intelligence-gathering tool compared to standard interrogation, it has been most effective in persuading people in Muslim countries that jihad against the U.S. is morally acceptable.

So do photos like this recently-released picture from Abu Ghreib (WARNING: graphic violent image).

We have become the very thing we say we wish to destroy.

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Human Rights Day

Norman Rockwell's

Today is Human Rights Day, the anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.

For the next year, the UN will be celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Declaration with a variety of events, public education efforts, and other programs. The theme of the year will be “Dignity and justice — for all of us”.

The United States has decided to celebrate by destroying videotapes of CIA torture sessions, lying about it to the media, and falsifying intelligence about Iran to justify going to war.

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Assorted Follow-Ups

Here’s a handful of follow-up items, none of which really deserved their own post but which I wanted to mention:

1. Pomegranate 7Up — the Market Basket supermarket in our town has had it, so I bought a bottle to sample over Thanksgiving. It’s pretty good, with a more pronounced fruit flavor than the Polar Soda pomegranate product. Unfortunately for me, it does not come in a sugar-free version, so I won’t be making a regular habit of drinking it. Meanwhile, I am totally ga-ga for Sierra Mist Free Cranberry Splash, which is another “limited edition” soda and is sugar-free (there’s also a sugared version if you’re not a diet soda drinker).

2. The OLPC XO laptop “Give One, Get One” program has been very successful and they have extended the program up to the end of December. Meanwhile, some Nigerian con-artist is suing OLPC, saying they stole “his” keyboard design, and some countries that were considering taking the laptops now seem to be backing away from the deal. It would be not a little ironic and actually a bit tragic if the XO becomes a success among the trendy techno-rich in America, but never reaches its real intended audience.

3. Personal Tasers — since I posted this a few weeks ago, there have been numerous stories about police officers tasering people left, right and sideways for often very spurious reasons such as double parking, refusing to sign a speeding ticket, and not being able to speak English. Meanwhile, the United Nations has issued a report which concludes that use of tasers is equivalent to torture. Of course, that will probably only serve to make them more popular, since we seem to be a nation of sadists.

4. While the Kindle continues to generate interest, looks like the Chumby isn’t getting any lovin’ at all. Engadget has done due diligence with its coverage in a couple of different reviews, but other wise I haven’t heard or seen anything about it, particularly in the mainstream media. That’s the way the cookie crumbles, I guess.

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High Crimes

IMPEACH THEM NOW!

Today’s New York Times spells it out in no uncertain terms: George W. Bush personally authorized the use of torture in a secret executive order he signed in July of this year, even after the Supreme Court ruled that the rules of the Geneva Convention apply to prisoners who were members of Al Quaeda. The use of “extreme interrogation measures” had been in place since 2001, but some activities had been suspended after the efforts by Congress and the Surpreme Court to curtail them. But they are back, justified by the vague guidelines from Alberto Gonzales’ Justice Department.

The Democratic leadership in Congress cannot continue to cast a blind eye on the misdeeds of the Executive Branch, particularly as they have intensified their drumbeat for another war. Their actions with regard to justifying torture will inevitably be used against Americans in combat, as a war with Iran will not be the cakewalk that the invasion of Iraq was. These criminals must be stopped before they are directly responsible for the loss of any number of lives in another illegal war.

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We Can Dish It Out, But Can We Take It?

dogtorture.jpg

Former commandant of the United States Marine Corps Charles Krulak and former CENTCOM commander Joseph Hoar have written this editorial in today’s Washington Post. It addresses the Bush Administration’s policies on the use of torture, recognizing from personal experience with combat that torture is next to worthless as a method of intelligence gathering and serves only as a method of terrorism itself. While it might create a level of “security theater” designed to assuage a panicky public, it creates a whole new set of problems: not only does counterterrorism seem to embolden and strengthen the resolve of the insurgents, it all but guarantees that these same methods will be used against our troops now and forever.

Sadly, 43% of Americans approve of the use of torture (scroll for it; it’s a long way down the page), and, as my post below discusses, collectively we are deliberately ignorant about the things we do, deliberately in denial about the reality of the situations that confront us, easily spooked into panic-drive over-response, and able to gin up our own fantasies and mythologies to justify that.

Comments:
Bravo! I just wrote a small piece about the American People’s ignorance and lack of ability to think for themselves.

It’s good to see you blogging again, Brian!
Posted by Sarah [URL] on 05/17/07

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